the roof was made out of tile
The same guys who made the first one. It was built almost immediately after the fire destroyed the first Globe.
The Globe Theatre, which was only partly owned by Shakespeare by the way, was built on a wooden frame and the walls made of lath and plaster. The first Globe, built in 1599, had a thatched roof (made of dried reeds). The second Globe, built in 1614, had a tile roof.
The Globe Theatre was opened in 1599 and the architect was Peter Street. It was made in the Tudor times, however, Sian O'leary doesn't know what time it was built. (Sian O'leary is a professional historian).
it was made by a theatre seamstress.
The theatre that Shakespeare is mainly associated with is the Globe Theatre. However, it is important to remember that the Globe Theatre was not even built until many years after Shakespeare started writing plays, and that a lot of his most famous plays (including Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer Night's Dream, and Henry V) were made famous in other theatres, especially The Curtain.
The same guys who made the first one. It was built almost immediately after the fire destroyed the first Globe.
The Globe Theatre, which was only partly owned by Shakespeare by the way, was built on a wooden frame and the walls made of lath and plaster. The first Globe, built in 1599, had a thatched roof (made of dried reeds). The second Globe, built in 1614, had a tile roof.
The Globe Theatre was opened in 1599 and the architect was Peter Street. It was made in the Tudor times, however, Sian O'leary doesn't know what time it was built. (Sian O'leary is a professional historian).
it was made by a theatre seamstress.
1582
the queen
The theatre that Shakespeare is mainly associated with is the Globe Theatre. However, it is important to remember that the Globe Theatre was not even built until many years after Shakespeare started writing plays, and that a lot of his most famous plays (including Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer Night's Dream, and Henry V) were made famous in other theatres, especially The Curtain.
There actually is no theatre called "Shakespeare theater". William Shakespeare worked in a number of theatres over the course of his 25-year plus career. These include the Theatre, the Curtain, the Rose, Newington Butts, the Globe and the Blackfriars. Of these The Globe is the most famous, and there exists a replica, built in 1996, in London England called "Shakespeare's Globe Theatre". This theatre has been built very close to the site of the original Globe and Rose theatres. To mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death, a replica of the second Globe theatre (built in 1614 after the first one burned down during one of Shakespeare's plays) has been built in Auckland New Zealand and will later be dismantled. There are seven Globe Theatre replicas in the USA, two in Germany, one in Italy and one in Japan. The replica of the Rose Theatre used in the film Shakespeare in Love has been preserved with the hope that it can be used as a regular theatre; there is also a Rose Theatre replica in Michigan. There is a replica of the Fortune Theatre (erected in 1600 by the theatre company in competition with Shakespeare's) at the University of Western Australia, and other replicas of this same theatre in Japan and Poland. There is a working replica of the Blackfriars Theatre, a theatre which Shakespeare owned a part of, in Staunton, Virginia, USA.
it was norfolk weed
The Globe Theatre was built in 1599.The theatre called Shakespeare's Globe was opened in 1997. The one Shakespeare acted in should never be called Shakespeare's Globe or William Shakespeare's Globe since he didn't own it and had nothing to do with its construction. For the sake of clarity, that theatre should be called The Globe Playhouse or The First Globe.
The Globe TheatreThe Globe Theatre
The first Globe Theatre, the one built in 1599, and the other outdoor theatres of its time such as the Rose, Swan, Curtain and Fortune, was built of wood timbering with whitewashed plastering. The stage was wooden, under a large wooden canopy held up by two mighty pillars, each made of a single tree trunk. Some of these materials might be hard to find, if it were not for the fact that the Burbages, who were the main financiers behind the Globe, owned a theatre (called The Theatre) which they could not use because it was on rented land and the landlord refused to allow any theatre patrons onto the premises. The Burbages, or rather their contractor Peter Street, dismantled The Theatre when the Landlords were out of town and saved the larger beams (like the two pillars which held up the stage) so they could be reused when Street built the Globe.